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ganeshaganeshagajananaekadanta

අගජානන පද්මාර්කම්

Agajanana Padmarkam in Sinhala · සිංහල

🕉️ hindu·📿 3× repetitions·🕐 Morning after bath; before worship, study or any new work; Ganesh Chaturthi·📜 Traditional Sanskrit dhyana verse to Ganesha
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Origin & Story

Traditional Sanskrit dhyana verse to Ganesha · Unknown (traditional) · Traditional

Agajanana Padmarkam is one of the best-loved short meditation verses on Ganesha, recited at the threshold of worship alongside 'Shuklambaradharam' and 'Vakratunda Mahakaya'. Its single verse turns on a graceful pun and image — 'Agaja-anana-padma-arka', the sun to the lotus-face of the mountain-born Parvati — picturing how the very sight of the elephant-faced son makes his mother's face bloom, before bowing to him as Ekadanta, the giver of endless boons.

As told in scripture

Devotees cherish how this verse, in two lines, holds both the tenderness of a mother's love and the power of the obstacle-remover; reciting it with feeling is said to draw Ganesha's grace as surely and gently as the sun opens the lotus.

The Mantra

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අගජානන පද්මාර්කං ගජානනමහර්නිශම් . අනේකදං තං භක්තානාමේකදන්තමුපාස්මහේ ..

Agajanana padmarkam gajananam aharnisham Anekadam tam bhaktanam ekadantam upasmahe

Meaning:As the sun makes the lotus bloom, so does the sight of Gajanana, the elephant-faced Lord, day and night make the lotus-face of his mother Parvati blossom with joy. We worship that single-tusked Lord (Ekadanta), who grants endless boons to his devotees.

Word-by-Word Meaning

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අගජා🔊AgajaAgaja — 'born of the mountain', i.e. Parvati (Gauri), daughter of Himavan
ආනන🔊ananaFace (here, the lotus-face of Parvati)
පද්ම🔊padmaLotus
අර්කම්🔊arkamThe sun (whose rays open the lotus)
අගජානන පද්මාර්කම්🔊Agajanana-padmarkamThe sun to the lotus-face of Parvati — whose presence makes his mother's face bloom with joy
ගජානනම්🔊gajananamThe elephant-faced one (Gajanana)
අහර්නිශම්🔊aharnishamDay and night, always
අනේකදම්🔊anekadamThe giver of many (boons) to his devotees; (also read as) the many-toothed / many-giving
තං භක්තානාම්🔊tam bhaktanamHim, (the giver) for the devotees
ඒකදන්තම්🔊ekadantamThe single-tusked one (Ekadanta)
උපාස්මහේ🔊upasmaheWe worship / we contemplate

Benefits of Chanting Agajanana Padmarkam

A short, tender dhyana verse to begin any prayer, study or undertaking with Ganesha's blessing

Its lovely image of mother and son deepens devotion and a feeling of nearness to the Lord

Worships Ganesha as Anekada — the giver of many boons to his devotees

Easily memorised and ideal for daily recitation and for teaching to children

Invokes Ekadanta, remover of obstacles, before new beginnings and examinations

Brings a calm, joyful focus of mind suitable for the start of worship or learning

How to Chant Agajanana Padmarkam

Repetitions3times
Best TimeMorning after bath; before worship, study or any new work; Ganesh Chaturthi

Sit facing an image of Lord Ganesha, fold the hands and recite the verse with devotion, picturing the joy on Parvati's face as she beholds her son. It may be chanted once or three times as an opening prayer (dhyana) before puja, study, examinations or any new undertaking, invoking Ekadanta for an auspicious, obstacle-free beginning.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Agajanana Padmarkam written in the Sinhala script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
'Agaja' means 'born of the mountain' — Parvati; 'anana' is face; 'padma' lotus; 'arka' the sun. The phrase means Ganesha is like the sun that makes the lotus-face of his mother Parvati bloom with joy. The verse then worships him as Ekadanta, the single-tusked giver of boons.
Ekadanta means 'the one with a single tusk'. By tradition Ganesha broke off one of his tusks (in some accounts to write the Mahabharata, in others in battle), and 'Ekadanta' became one of his most beloved names, invoked in this verse.
It is recited in the morning and at the beginning of any worship, study, examination or new venture, as a short dhyana (meditation) verse to invoke Ganesha's grace and an auspicious, obstacle-free start.
Yes. Being short, melodious and built on the sweet image of a mother delighting in her child, it is often among the first Ganesha prayers taught to children and is easy to memorise.

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Read the full Agajanana Padmarkam with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts